Tower Bells - Introduction

For more than a thousand years, tower bells have spoken to the people with
wordless voices.
They have shouted in warning, wept in mourning and laughed in rejoicing;
they have told time and called to worship; they have brought music to the populace.
Although the ceaseless clamor of the mass-transportation era has pushed these
voices out of the daily lives of the multitudes, they cannot be entirely silenced.
Because they have such power to stir the human soul, they still find a place in
the modern world, bringing old traditions with them and making new ones.

This Website is dedicated to serving almost all aspects of tower bells
by informing the public about them.
It does this in part by presenting information arranged to support
those organizations which follow specific tower bell traditions.
It also presents information related to tower bell matters which are not
directly related to any existing organization.

Do not expect to find completeness here.
This is an evolving project,
which uses links to other Websites to avoid duplication of information.
Nor will you find fancy Webpage formatting here--information is what is important.
(The system on which this Website was originally hosted imposed severe filespace limitations,
but fortunately that is no longer a constraint.)

Carillons are musical instruments made of at least 23 conventional tower bells which have been
tuned so that they can be played together in harmony.
The bells are hung fixed in a frame, or "dead",
and are played by some kind of mechanism which operates internal clappers and/or
external hammers.
There are two varieties:

Traditional carillons use a keyboard with baton-shaped manual keys, a pedalboard,
and "tracker" action (direct mechanical connection) for precise dynamic control
and dynamic musical expression.

Non-traditional carillons use electro-mechanical or electro-pneumatic mechanisms,
driven by an electric keyboard and/or various kinds of automatic controls.
Most have no capability whatsoever for musical expression.
Still, they contain real bells, unlike the various electronic devices that attempt
(always unsuccessfully) to imitate bells.

Some traditional carillons are equipped with additional mechanisms of various kinds for
automatic play.
A common motive for doing this is to strike the quarter-hours and the hour
as a clock-chime would do.
(See below.)

See The Guild of Carillonneurs in North America (GCNA)
for a more formal definition of "carillon" and for information about the Guild's activities
and related events.
The Guild's focus is on what is here called the "traditional" carillon,
there called simply a carillon.

The GCNA is one of the member societies of the
World Carillon Federation,
an association of all national and regional societies which focus their interest on
the art of the carillon.

Filling out the survey forms
for your carillon and its tower will get you a free extract
from the database "Carillons and Chimes of the World."

Chimes are smaller musical instruments (8 to 22 conventional tower bells, hung fixed)
in which the bells may or may not have been tuned,
but nevertheless approximate the diatonic or chromatic scales sufficiently well
to be able to play tunes recognizably.
Some are in fact tuned to the same precision as carillons,
and thus can be used to play harmony as well as melody.
Several different kinds of mechanisms have been used to play chimes,
either manually or automatically, but in comparison to carillons there is less need to distinguish
between traditional and non-traditional mechanisms.
An additional function as a clock-chime is fairly common.
Among older chimes in churches, the inclusion of one or more swinging bells is also fairly common.

Rings are sets of tower bells tuned to the diatonic scale and hung to swing in a full
circle, with one person controlling one bell by means of a single rope and wheel.
Most rings are hung and rung in the English style called "change ringing".
However, in the Veronese district of Italy are many rings
hung for what may be called "concerto" ringing.

See the Website of
The North American Guild of Change Ringers (NAGCR)
for information about change ringing on this continent.
There you will also find links to numerous other Websites focussed on the
special techniques of hanging tower bells and ringing them in various
mathematically-based methods.
Some of those links will take you to England,
the place of origin of change-ringing and home of more than 95% of the world's "ringable" towers.

Single tower bells and small sets of such bells are (or have been) used
for a wide variety of purposes, some of which are described here.

Peals

A peal is a set of two or more bells hung for swinging in less than a full circle.
Consequently, each bell swings at its own natural pendulum frequency, so that it
appears to sound randomly with respect to the other bell(s) in the peal.
In Canada and the USA, some churches have peals of two to five bells;
in churches of continental Europe and Spanish-speaking countries, cathedrals and
very large churches may have peals of more than a dozen bells.
There is no prescribed relationship among the pitches of peal bells, though in the
case of three or four they are often arranged in a major or minor chord.

Clock-chimes

A clock-chime is a set of two to eight bells (most commonly two or four) hung dead to
be struck under control of a tower clock, usually to indicate the quarter hours
in addition to the hour.
The most famous arrangement of bells for this purpose is the four notes of the
Westminster Quarters, more properly called Cambridge quarters.
Another common arrangement is "ting-tang" quarters, which requires only two bells.
A variety of other arrangements are known, some being unique to a particular clock.

Zvons

A zvon is a set of bells hung dead and rung in rhythmic patterns according to the
liturgical principles of the Russian Orthodox Church (or, less commonly, another of
the national Orthodox Christian churches).
The pitches of the bells in a zvon are not arranged scale-wise, though some of them
may fit familiar chords.
The heaviest bells ever hung in towers are the basses of Russian zvons.

Single bells

Some of the most common uses for single bells are as follows:

A church bell calls members of a congregation to worship, and is
usually swung for that purpose.
Sometimes it can also be tolled for funerals.

A clock bell is hung dead to be struck under control of a tower clock
to indicate the hours of the day.
Some tower clocks also strike once at the half hour.

A fire bell or alarm bell was usually hung dead, and was struck
in distinctive patterns to warn the community of fire or other danger.
This usage has become obsolete since the development of electrically-operated sirens.
But some fire bells survive as historical artifacts, occasionally in their
original locations.

A fog bell or lighthouse bell was often used to warn ships of
coastal hazards when fog obscured the light from the lighthouse.
This function was superseded by foghorns of various types, which in turn became obsolete.

A plantation bell was a small tower bell used for signalling on a
plantation, farm or estate.

A tower bell of appropriate size could be used as a ship's bell on a
riverboat or warship.
For this purpose it could be hung from a mast or mounted
on an upper deck with conventional fittings.
It was used to signal the deck crew (and wharf crew) from the pilot house,
and was distinct from the small bells used to signal the engine room or to indicate time.

These are REALLY BIG bells, which impress viewers by their sheer size
and listeners by the profundity (both depth and volume) of their sound.
For more details, including our definition plus lists of such bells around the world,
see our Great Bells page.

Large tubular bells,
cast or extruded from approximately the same material as conventional tower bells
(or perhaps of brass rather than bronze),
have been used to make tower music or to serve as clock bells.
The largest such tubes weigh hundreds of pounds.
Chimes made of these bells appeared in both England and the USA in the late 19th century.
About 180 were made in England, though not much is yet known about them; at least one was
exported to Canada.
The early American tubular chimes never became popular--only a dozen or so are known,
and little is known about their makers.
But a later American maker produced more than 440 tubular tower chimes of various sizes.

Large hemispherical bells were made for tower use in both England and the USA in the late
19th and early 20th centuries.
Like tubular bells, they were intended to be an economical substitute
for conventional tower bells.
About 40 chimes of such bells are known to have been made in England,
though many no longer survive.
Only about five such chimes were made in the USA, while two were imported from England.
All are listed on the chimola index page.

Filling out the chime survey forms
for your hemispherical chime and its tower
will get you a free extract from the database "Carillons and Chimes of the World."

There are some kinds of bells which, while not primarily intended for use as
tower bells, have nevertheless been used that way on occasion.
They include railroad bells (bronze) and postmount farm or dinner bells (cast steel).
Some information about such bells may eventually be included here.

There are many kinds of bells which are not tower bells.
A few examples are handbells, doorbells, cowbells, sleigh bells, gongs,
thin-wall tubular bells (for orchestra, pipe organ, or long-case clock)
and many varieties of collectible small bells.
I do not presently intend to cover any of these kinds of bells, though I will provide
links to other sites which do so.

There are also things in towers which purport to be bells, chimes or carillons,
but are not.
All of these things involve large outdoor loudspeakers plus electronic devices which either
play recordings of real bells or attempt (always unsuccessfully)
to generate sounds which imitate real bells.
I will never cover any of these kinds of devices, nor will I provide links to other sites
which do so.
(Exception: For other sites related to both real bells and electronic
imitations, I may provide links with respect to the real bell topics.)

Oriental temple bells:
In China, Japan, Korea, and many of the countries of Southeast Asia, bells of different kinds
are often associated with worship practices in the temples of indigenous religions.
Some of these temple bells are cast from bronze as Western bells are,
and the largest of them are among the very largest bells in the world.
However, their shape and sound are significantly different from that of Western bells,
as is their use.
They are hung stationary, usually near ground level, and are rung singly.
The largest of these are listed on a page about
great Oriental bells.

Handbells:
See the Website of the
Handbell Musicians of America (HMA)
for information about making music with handbells, and for links to related resources.
(HMA was formerly The American Guild of English Handbell Ringers, or AGEHR.)

Collectibles:
The principal organization of bell collectors is
The American Bell Association
International, Inc. (ABAII).
However, one need not be a collector to join ABAII.
Their bi-monthly magazine, The Bell Tower, often contains articles about other
types of bells, including tower bells.

Tower bells are typically made in foundries which are essentially dedicated to this function,
since there is no longer a market for other cast bronze objects of comparable size.
(In bygone centuries, those who made bells in peacetime made cannon in wartime--a variation
on the ancient concept of "beating swords into plowshares".
But bronze cannon became obsolete, while bronze bells didn't,
or at least not to the same degree.)

The weights of bells can be reported in any of several different units of measure,
some common and some obscure.
The subject is discussed at length here,
beginning at a page about bell weights.
Here we add to that an online calculator
for converting between different units of measurement of weight.
This is especially designed to handle the old British Imperial system of Cwt-Qtr-Lb,
which is still in regular use to describe bells hung for change-ringing.

This page was created 2000/03/04 and last revised on 2012/07/25.
(Before the Website merger,
there was a revision date in a box near the top of this page,
reflecting the most recent change to any page on this Website.)

Please send comments or questions (either general or about this page) to
csz_stl@swbell.netUse similar links on other pages to send specific comments or questions about those pages.